As per recent information from a regional media outlet, the prosecutor of South Korea has seized Bitcoins from an unnamed crypto allegedly operating a crypto scam victimizing the elderly of the nation.
It further notes that, on November 26, 2024, the prosecutor’s office revealed that it had seized digital assets valued at around $9.3 million.
Earlier this month the alleged scammer was convicted for operating a multi-style crypto fraud. In the same case, the court ruled ordering a 10-year prison and a penalty of 13 billion in national currency.
The media reports quotes that the convicted have refused to pay even a single penny of the penalty. Per the person aware about the fact the jailed mastermind told the honorable court that he doesn’t even have a 0.01 percent regret of his crime.
As per prosecutors’ argument even after the arrest of the scammer his former wife and children continue to live in an expensive residence valued over billions in South Korean currency.
Furthermore, she used the same funds (earned by defrauding innocent investors) to get her children expensive tuition. It is worth noting that she was planning to get settled in Canada to enjoy her expensive and lavish life far from the regulator’s eye.
Since the beginning of this year till Mid November, the enforcement agency, regulators and other government authorities have seized digital assets worth millions of dollars and hundreds of illegal links to cryptocurrencies and related services.
Earlier on November 07, 2024, it was reported that a scammer tried to defraud an official of Gyeonggi Southern Provincial Police Agency’s Mobile Criminal Investigation Unit who was nabbed, exposing a million-dollar fraud.
However, it is worth noting that South Korea has an appreciable number of cryptocurrency holders and users with a big market size.
The South Korean government has postponed its plans to impose a 20 percent tax on crypto earnings until 2025. Most recently the officials revealed a new tax reform strategy, pushing back the crypto tax policy due to ongoing market stagnation and the need for additional time to implement investor protection measures.
This delay follows a previous decision by the country’s lawmakers to defer the taxation of virtual assets from its original 2023 deadline.
In the past few months the nation has expressed its keen interest in CBDC and a recent report notes that it has authorized seven national banks to take part in a pilot program testing digital financial services based on central bank digital currency and deposit tokens.
In SK, crypto trading is permitted as long as the assets are not explicitly banned, despite the absence of formal legalization by the government. On October 10, the Financial Services Commission of the nation revealed plans to create a digital asset community.
South Korea achieved a 73.5% score, solidifying its position as one of the world’s fastest-growing cryptocurrency hubs.